ORLANDOBetter communication is needed between oncologists and their patients regarding the benefits and risks of adjuvant therapy, according to a study presented at the 2007 Gastrointestinal Cancers Symposium (abstract 239).

The researchers surveyed 150 colorectal cancer patients treated with adjuvant chemotherapy within the past 5 years and given an audio educational program on adjuvant chemotherapy. Of these patients, 36% said they would choose to be treated again with the same therapy for a reduction in risk of recurrence of just 1%, and 57% said they would choose to be treated again for a 3% reduction, reported Neil Love, MD, an oncologist and president of Research to Practice, a medical education company in Miami.

However, their doctors had different ideas about what they would choose. When Dr. Love asked a group of 150 medical oncologists and GI clinical investigators how many of their patients they thought would be willing to undergo the same chemotherapy for a 1% reduction in the risk of recurrence, the physicians thought that just 19% would choose the same treatment.

There were also some patients (12%) who said they would not have chemotherapy again, even with a 10% reduction in risk. "Even though we think we know our patients, this survey shows that there is still a lot about their reactions and expectations of treatment that we do not know. This is why surveys such as ours are potentially very useful," he said.

Erroneous Expectations?

Patients continued to have erroneous expectations about chemotherapy even after they were given educational CDs and videos to listen to and watch, and also had a chance to sit down and talk with researchers and oncologists about the risks and benefits of adjuvant chemotherapy.